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Blood management and transfusion strategies in 600 patients undergoing total joint arthroplasty: an analysis of pre-operative autologous blood donation
Authors:Paolo Perazzo  Marco Viganò  Laura de Girolamo  Francesco Verde  Anna Vinci  Giuseppe Banfi  Sergio Romagnoli
Institution:1.Joint Replacement Department, Galeazzi Orthopaedic Institute, University of Milan, Milan, Italy;2.Biotechnologies Orthopaedic Laboratory, Galeazzi Orthopaedic Institute, University of Milan, Milan, Italy;3.Healthcare Medical Department, Galeazzi Orthopaedic Institute, University of Milan, Milan, Italy;4.Chair of Clinical Biochemistry, School of Medicine, University of Milan, Milan, Italy
Abstract:

Background

Blood loss during total joint arthroplasty strongly influences the time to recover after surgery and the quality of the recovery. Blood conservation strategies such as pre-operative autologous blood donation and post-operative cell salvage are intended to avoid allogeneic blood transfusions and their associated risks. Although widely investigated, the real effectiveness of these alternative transfusion practices remains controversial.

Materials and methods

The surgery reports of 600 patients undergoing total joint arthroplasty (312 hip and 288 knee replacements) were retrospectively reviewed to assess transfusion needs and related blood management at our institute. Evaluation parameters included post-operative blood loss, haemoglobin concentration measured at different time points, ASA score, and blood transfusion strategies.

Results

Autologous blood donation increased the odds of receiving a red blood cell transfusion. Reinfusion by a cell salvage system of post-operative shed blood was found to limit adverse effects in cases of severe post-operative blood loss. The peri-operative net decrease in haemoglobin concentration was higher in patients who had predeposited autologous blood than in those who had not.

Discussion

The strengths of this study are the high number of cases and the standardised procedures, all operations having been performed by a single orthopaedic surgeon and a single anaesthesiologist. Our data suggest that a pre-operative autologous donation programme may often be useless, if not harmful. Conversely, the use of a cell salvage system may be effective in reducing the impact of blood transfusion on a patient’s physiological status. Basal haemoglobin concentration emerged as a useful indicator of transfusion probability in total joint replacement procedures.
Keywords:total hip arthroplasty  total knee arthroplasty  pre-operative autologous blood donation  post-operative blood cell salvage system  blood management
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